4.6 Article

Neuromuscular Fatigue during Prolonged Exercise in Hypoxia

Journal

MEDICINE & SCIENCE IN SPORTS & EXERCISE
Volume 49, Issue 3, Pages 430-439

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1249/MSS.0000000000001118

Keywords

CORTICAL VOLUNTARY ACTIVATION; TRANSCRANIAL MAGNETIC STIMULATION; BRAIN OXYGENATION; KNEE EXTENSORS

Categories

Funding

  1. French program Investissement d'Avenir - Agence Nationale pour la Recherche
  2. grant Infrastructure d'avenir en Biologie Sante' [ANR-11-INBS-0006]
  3. French National Research Agency [NT09_653348]

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Purpose: Prolonged cycling exercise performance in normoxia is limited because of both peripheral and central neuromuscular impairments. It has been reported that cerebral perturbations are greater during short-duration exercise in hypoxia compared with normoxia. The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that central deficits are accentuated in hypoxia compared with normoxia during prolonged (three bouts of 80 min separated by 25 min) whole-body exercise at the same relative intensity. Methods: Ten subjects performed two sessions consisting of three 80-min cycling bouts at 45% of their relative maximal aerobic power in normoxia and hypoxia (FiO(2) = 0.12). Before exercise and after each bout, maximal voluntary force, voluntary activation assessed with nerve stimulation and transcranial magnetic stimulation, corticospinal excitability (motor evoked potential), intracortical inhibition (cortical silent period), and electrical (M-wave) and contractile (twitch and doublet peak forces) properties of the knee extensors were measured. Prefrontal and motor cortical oxygenation was also recorded during each cycling bout in both conditions. Results: A significant but similar force reduction (approximate to-22%) was observed at the end of exercise in normoxia and hypoxia. The modifications of voluntary activation assessed with transcranial magnetic stimulation and nerve stimulation, motor evoked potential, cortical silent period, and M-wave were also similar in both conditions. However, cerebral oxygenation was reduced in hypoxia compared with normoxia. Conclusion: These findings show that when performed at the same relative low intensity, prolonged exercise does not induce greater supraspinal fatigue in hypoxia compared with normoxia. Despite lower absolute exercise intensities in hypoxia, reduced brain O-2 availability might contribute to similar amounts of central fatigue compared with normoxia.

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